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Plagiarise. Let no one else's work evade your eyes
The Economist ^ | Mar 14th 2002

Posted on 03/15/2002 2:46:39 PM PST by the

Cheat-detection software

Plagiarise. Let no one else's work evade your eyes

Mar 14th 2002
From The Economist print edition


A window of opportunity for intellectual cheats is closing fast

EVER since Al Gore invented it, the Internet has been a paradise for those with a creative attitude to facts. Students, for example, commission and sell essays with such ease there that online “paper mills” devoted to this trade are one of the few dotcom business models still thriving. With a few clicks of a mouse, a student can outsource any academic chore to “research” sites such as Gradesaver.com or the Evil House of Cheat.

One market opportunity, however, frequently creates another. The past few months have seen a rapid rise in interest in software designed to catch the cheats. The subscriber base of Turnitin, a leading anti-plagiarism software house based in Oakland, California, has risen by 25% since the beginning of the year. Around 150,000 students in America alone are under its beady electronic eye. And in Britain, the Joint Information Systems Committee, the unit responsible for advising the country's universities on information technology, has tested the firm's software in five colleges. If all goes well, every university lecturer in the country will soon be able to vet his students' submissions with it.

Turnitin's software chops each paper submitted for scrutiny into small pieces of text. The resulting “digital fingerprint” is compared, using statistical techniques originally designed to analyse brain waves (John Barrie, the firm's founder, was previously a biophysicist), to more than a billion documents that have been fingerprinted in a similar fashion. These include the contents of online paper mills, the classics of literature and the firm's own archive of all submitted term papers, as well as a snapshot of the current contents of the World Wide Web.

Whenever a matching pattern is found, the software makes a note. After highlighting instances of replication, or obvious paraphrasing (according to Turnitin, some 30% of submitted papers are “less than original”), the computer running the software returns the annotated document to the teacher who originally submitted it—leaving him with the final decision on what is and is not permissible.

Which teachers and institutions will choose to employ such software? Past research has shown that, perhaps surprisingly, academic dishonesty correlates with high academic achievement. Nor is public exposure of widespread cheating likely to burnish a university's reputation. Universities with the highest-achieving students and the most unsullied reputations may therefore have the most to lose from anti-plagiarism software. Indeed, a curious pattern has emerged among Turnitin's clients: good universities, such as Duke, Rutgers and Cornell, employ it. Those that like to think of themselves as top-notch, such as Princeton, Yale and Stanford, do not. According to Dr Barrie, “You apply our technology at Harvard and it would be like a nuclear bomb going off.”

Explosions are happening lower down the academic ladder, as well. In January Christine Pelton, a biology teacher in Kansas, was forced out of her job for using Turnitin's software. Just before Christmas she had run 118 essays though the mill, and found that 28 had been plagiarised. Naturally, she failed the cheats. But rather than thank her, the parents of some of those cheats reacted with indignation. They forced the local school board to order her to pass the offenders, and she resigned in protest. Clearly, shooting the messenger has not yet gone out of fashion.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: academialist; cheatdetection; cheating; education; educationnews; ivyleague; plagarists; techindex; universities
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1 posted on 03/15/2002 2:46:39 PM PST by the
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To: the
For emphasis, I am re-quoting the following:

Indeed, a curious pattern has emerged among Turnitin's clients: good universities, such as Duke, Rutgers and Cornell, employ it. Those that like to think of themselves as top-notch, such as Princeton, Yale and Stanford, do not. According to Dr Barrie, “You apply our technology at Harvard and it would be like a nuclear bomb going off.”

2 posted on 03/15/2002 2:50:01 PM PST by the
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To: the
Those [universities] that like to think of themselves as top-notch, such as Princeton, Yale and Stanford, . . . .

Well put.

3 posted on 03/15/2002 2:54:59 PM PST by Logophile
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: the
Plagiarize,
Let no one else's work evade your eyes,
Remember why the good Lord made your eyes,
So don't shade your eyes,
But plagiarize, plagiarize, plagiarize -
Only be sure always to call it please 'research'.

Tom Lehrer

6 posted on 03/15/2002 3:00:45 PM PST by dagny taggert
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To: seamole
Thanks for the bumps.

This isn't an area I typically would post an article under so I wasn't up to speed on the applicable bump lists.

7 posted on 03/15/2002 3:01:39 PM PST by the
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To: dagny taggert
"The greatest mathematician to ever get chalk on his coat."
8 posted on 03/15/2002 3:04:14 PM PST by AmishDude
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To: the
The Economist plagiarized the title from Tom Lehrer's song Lobachevsky. (I didn't see an attribution.)
9 posted on 03/15/2002 3:07:42 PM PST by Mitchell
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To: AmishDude
"And then I write
By morning, night,
And afternoon,
And pretty soon
My name in Dnepropetrovsk is cursed,
When he finds out I publish first!"
11 posted on 03/15/2002 3:10:25 PM PST by fnord
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To: fnord
"I have a friend in Minsk, who has a friend in Pinsk . . ."
12 posted on 03/15/2002 3:12:41 PM PST by AmishDude
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To: AmishDude
and don't get me started on the Irish Ballad :-)

In honor of St Paddy's day:

"One morning in a fit of pique,
Sing rickety-tickety-tin,
One morning in a fit of pique,
She drowned her father in the creek.
The water tasted bad for a week,
And we had to make do with gin."

13 posted on 03/15/2002 3:15:52 PM PST by fnord
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To: abwehr
Does this mean Doris Kearns Goodwin will not be able to publish her next book "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich"

Her book will come out after the DemocRAT primary for governor in Massachusetts. The title is really "The Rise and Fall of the Turd Reich". (shameless theft from another thread)

Another theft. I loved Rush's bumper sticker today "Honk if you wrote Doris Kearns Goodwin's latest book".

14 posted on 03/15/2002 3:43:04 PM PST by jackbill
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To: the
From a radio broadcast: "He who is most original conceals his sources the best".

Certainly applies in plagerism.

15 posted on 03/15/2002 3:49:41 PM PST by Ole Okie
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To: the
Please, it goes:

Plagiarize! Plagiarize! Think why God gave you eyes!

Tom Lehrer, circa 1960

16 posted on 03/15/2002 3:53:45 PM PST by Ross Amann
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To: dagny taggert
I enjoyed the article very much. I was distressed, however, that the author quoted Tom Lehrer's magnificent opus, "Lobashevsky," who was "the greatest mathematician who ever got chalk on his coat." Darned close to plagiarism, I'd say.

Congressman Billybob

2 days more: "Approaching the Heliopause from 1776"

17 posted on 03/15/2002 4:00:51 PM PST by Congressman Billybob
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To: Ross Amann
Hey, don't criticize me, I didn't write it!

;-)


18 posted on 03/15/2002 4:02:14 PM PST by the
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To: AmishDude
Why, thanks. (blush) I didn't know you knew me personally. Except that you meant to say her coat. But I appreciate the sentiment. :-)
19 posted on 03/15/2002 5:59:16 PM PST by dagny taggert
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To: dagny taggert
A female mathematician? That isn't possible. Surely you are joking. It has been a long quest indeed, searching for the elusive "mathbabe".
20 posted on 03/15/2002 6:03:43 PM PST by AmishDude
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